{"id":2648,"date":"2014-08-26T09:36:38","date_gmt":"2014-08-26T09:36:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/?p=2648"},"modified":"2014-08-26T09:36:38","modified_gmt":"2014-08-26T09:36:38","slug":"the-perseverance-of-print-based-authorship-within-humanities-scholarship","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/?p=2648","title":{"rendered":"The perseverance of print-based authorship within humanities scholarship (I)"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3><\/h3>\n<p>Chapter 3 of my thesis focuses on authorship, and you can find a draft of the first part of the chapter underneath. As I stated before, any feedback is of course more than welcome but please take into account that these are just fragments in process which are part of a larger (undefined) \u2018whole\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>For chapter 2 of my thesis, see\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/2014\/06\/16\/framing-the-debate-i-historical-discourses-the-struggle-for-both-the-past-and-future-of-the-book\/\">here<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/2014\/06\/18\/framing-the-debate-ii-historical-discourses-the-struggle-for-both-the-past-future-of-the-book\/\">here<\/a>. I will post the remainder of chapter 3 later this week. You can find part 2 <a href=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/2014\/08\/27\/the-perseverance-of-print-based-authorship-within-humanities-scholarship-ii\/\">here<\/a> and part 3 <a href=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/2014\/08\/28\/the-perseverance-of-print-based-authorship-within-humanities-scholarship-iii\/\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/typewriter-woman-at.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2674\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/typewriter-woman-at.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"227\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/typewriter-woman-at.jpg 650w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/typewriter-woman-at-300x228.jpg 300w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/typewriter-woman-at-396x300.jpg 396w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<h1 class=\"western\" align=\"CENTER\"><\/h1>\n<h1 class=\"western\" align=\"CENTER\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span lang=\"en-GB\">Chapter 3. The perseverance of print-based authorship within humanities scholarship<\/span><\/span><\/h1>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"RIGHT\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\">I think that, as our society changes, at the very moment when it is in the process of changing, the author function will disappear, and in such a manner that fiction and its polysemous texts will once again function according to another mode, but still with a system of constraint \u2013 one that will no longer be the author but will have to be determined or, perhaps, experienced [exp\u00e9rimenter].<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"RIGHT\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\">(Foucault 1977)<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"western\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span lang=\"en-GB\">The roles and functions of the scholarly author<\/span><\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/7046.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-2655 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/7046.jpg?w=202\" alt=\"\" width=\"212\" height=\"309\" \/><\/a><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Authorship within academia has reached a cult status. Scholars, in the humanities at least, are increasingly assessed according to the weight of their individual, single authorial output in the form of published articles or books and less according to the quality of their teaching, to take just one possible instance. The evaluation of a scholar\u2019s authorial contributions to a field is considered essential for hiring purposes and further career and tenure development, for funding and grant allocations, as well as for interim institutional assessments such as the REF in the UK. Authorial productivity and<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">, connected to this, the originality of one\u2019s work, increasingly determines a scholars standing within academic value networks. This fetishisation of scholarly authorship is integrally connected to an increasingly hegemonic academic discourse related to originality, authority and responsibility, and linked to a humanist and romantic notion of the individual author-genius. <\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">This specific discourse on authorship is directly connected to a certain essentialist idea of \u2018the human\u2019 which one could argue the humanities, and with that scholarship as a whole, is based upon (Weber 2000, Fisher 2013). This is the idea of the universal human, <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the sovereign human individual<\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">, and of the self as unity, which can be translated, as Gary Hall has done, into the idea of \u2018<\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the indivisible, individual, liberal human(ist) author\u2019 (Hall, G. 2012). Although, as Hall also states, this idea of human essence, of a unified self and a integral individual has been criticised and interrogated by critical theorists for over a century now, the way knowledge is produced, consumed and disseminated remains very similar to the print-based authorship practices devised as part of the discourse on the humanist author. <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">This discourse continues to shape our academic authorial practices, in conjunction with our publishing practices, even in an increasingly digital environment. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> However, practices and discourses related to collaboration, networking and the greater academic conversation, have similarly fed our notions of scholarship over the centuries, and for many scholars the Internet and digital communication seem the perfect opportunity to promote these capacities further. Developments in the sciences, where multi-authorship has become common practice, also increasingly challenge ideas of individual scholarship in the humanities. Some even argue that networked science has the potential to fundamentally change the nature of scholarship and scientific discovery (Nielsen 2011).<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> In this chapter I will examine how we can explore and critique the role humanist authorship plays within academia (and within the humanities more in specific) by analysing the way authorship currently functions within scholarly networks, and how our authorial roles and practices are constructed and are performed as part of these. I will explore authorship from a historical, theoretical and practical perspective, in an effort to break down the discourse on the cult of individual authorship while also being critical of the\u2014in some instances almost utopian\u2014hope invested in scholarly practices of networked collaboration. I will do so by, among other things, analysing the history of authorship and the rise of the humanist authorial discourse which shows that single authorship is a very recent construct and that scholarship has always been collaborative and distributed. At the same time I will explore the mostly theoretical critique of authorship provided by poststructuralist thinkers, as well as what can be seen as some of the recent practical embodiments of that critique. Although we have been proclaiming the death of the author for several decades now, authorship remains strongly embedded within our institutions and cultural and social practices. In what follows I will analyse some recent practical experiments with authorship critique, including hypertext, which can be seen to focus mainly on replacing the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>authority<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> and <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>responsibility<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> of the author with that of the reader. I will also look at remix practices within academia, which can be seen to mainly target the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>originality<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> of authorship. Furthermore, I will investigate current practices of collaborative authorship within the digital humanities, which can be seen to foreground collaborative notions of authorship, challenging its presumed <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>individualistic<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> nature. However, as I will show, although interesting and promising, many of these recent collaborative, networked, interactive, multimodal, hypertextual, and remixed forms of authorship, proposed as an alternative to the above described humanist authorship discourse, nonetheless still resort to many of the same structures and practices.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> I will end this chapter by putting forward two examples of what can be seen as an anti-authorship critique, namely plagiarism and anonymous authorship. This will lead to an exploration of the potential for a posthumanist critique of authorship and, as an extension of that, possible forms of posthuman authorship. Here posthumanist authorship wants to continuously rethink and reperform, both in theory and practice, the way authorship functions within academia. And in its critique of the humanist notions underlying authorship, it wants to explore and experiment with more distributed and posthumanist authorship practices. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writer.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-2649\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writer.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"234\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writer.jpg 500w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writer-300x235.jpg 300w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writer-384x300.jpg 384w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<h3 class=\"western\"><span lang=\"en-GB\">Authorship and the discourse on book history<\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">The relationship of book history and book historians with authorship, its historical development, and the author function, has been changeable and complex. As book historian Roger Chartier argues, book history was developed within currents of literary criticism such as <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">structuralism, analytic bibliography and new criticism, which was especially dominant in Anglophone countries, which all saw the text, and thus books, as self-containing systems, without authors and readers. <\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">As Chartier claims, the history of the book was thus for a long time a history with neither readers nor authors <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(1994:\u00a024\u201325)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. In the French school of the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>histoire du livre<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">, the situation was initially not much better, although it focused at least on the sociology of readers (although not on reading practices). In France, just as in the Anglo-Saxon bibliographic school, the author was forgotten, even in the tradition of the social history and the material production of the book, as produced by Febvre and Martin, among others. In France, Chartier claims, books thus had readers but no authors <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(1994:\u00a025\u201326)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. However, Chartier sees attention to the author return in Bourdieu\u2019s sociology of cultural production, McKenzie\u2019s sociology of texts, reception history within literary criticism, and new historicism. A<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> constrained author, <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">as Chartier calls it<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">, as opposed to a romantic one, returns here, as in these theoretical systems the text and the book are reconnected with their author and her or his intentions. <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Chartier applauds this return of the author as a subject of investigation in book studies, especially and more precisely, of the author function and its practice and techniques.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> One of the questions concerning authorship that plays an important role in the book historical discourse is whether it is print that established or enabled our modern notion of authorship, or whether authorship predates print? For instance, Chartier focuses on how in its connection with censorship and literary or scholarly property and ownership, authorship is fully inscribed with (the culture of) print. Print extended the circulation of potentially transgressive books and it established a market system in which proper roles where established (author, publisher, bookseller etc.). At the same time, he argues that certain essential traits of authorship predate print. Already in the manuscript age authors, such as Petrarch, tried to establish control over the way their texts looked and were distributed, especially with respect to corruption through continual copying by copyists. According to Chartier, this shows an early emergence of \u2018one <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the major expressions <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the author-function, the possibility <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">deciphering in the forms <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">a book the intention that lay behind the creation <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the text\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Chartier 1994:\u00a055)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing-cornell-univ-library-1920-640.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-2656 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing-cornell-univ-library-1920-640.jpg?w=226\" alt=\"\" width=\"262\" height=\"344\" \/><\/a><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Ong also locates the beginning of authorship before print, namely with the coming of written discourse. Where orality is performative and produces community, written discourse, he states, is detached from the performer, it starts to become an autonomous thing where it turns the writer<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> into a subject distinct from the group<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. As Ong puts it, \u2018<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">with writing, resentment at plagiarism begins to develop<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Ong 1982:\u00a0128)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. In manuscript culture, however, intertextuality continues to rule, where it is still connected to the commonplace tradition of the oral world, creating and adapting texts out of other texts. As McLuhan emphasises, written text was still authorative only in an oral way <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(McLuhan 1962:\u00a0104)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. Both Ong and McLuhan thus argue that it was print that truly created the sense of the private ownership of words and that created a new feeling for authority, where print and its visual organisation encourages a different mindset. A work becomes closed, cut off from other works and unique. It was print culture which, according to Ong, finally enabled romantic notions such as originality and creativity to arise and which encouraged the development of our modern notion of authorship <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Ong 1982:\u00a0130\u2013131)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. As McLuhan stated in this respect, \u2018scribal culture had neither authors, nor readers\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(McLuhan 1962:\u00a0130)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> How did authorship develop in a print environment? When it comes to early publishing, Eisenstein explains that the modern division of labour was not yet very common. Printers were mostly printer-publishers and many academics, such as Johannes Kepler, were themselves publishers or were very much involved in the printing process (Eisenstein 1979:\u00a018). <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">As Eisenstein points out, early printers played an important role in forging definitions of property rights, in shaping new concepts of authorship, and in exploiting new markets <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0122)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. However, their labours would not have had much result in the manuscript age, as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Eisenstein argues it was only with the coming of print, and with that of a fixed text, that individual innovations and discoveries could became more explicitly recognized and that the distinction between copy and original could become clear (Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0119\u2013120). After the advent of copyright especially, it became much easier for an author to make a profit by publicly releasing a text, as their invention rights were now firmly established in law and no longer only guaranteed by guild protection (by the Stationers\u2019 Company, for instance). Only with the coming of print, Eisenstein claims, could personal authorship really become established. People now wanted to see their work in print, fixed and unaltered. As she puts it, \u2018<\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">until it became possible to distinguish between composing a poem and reciting one, or writing a book and copying one; until books could be classified by something other than incipits; how could modern games of books and authors be played?\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0121)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">New forms of authorship and property rights thus started to undermine older forms of collective authority, which was exposed as error-prone. Where innovation came from was hard to determine before print, Eisenstein points out, as due to drifting texts and a lack of access to manuscripts, it was hard to establish what was already known and who was the first to know it. In other words, there was no systematic forward movement <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0124)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. The term original also started to change its meaning. Initially, it meant \u2018close or back to the sources\u2019. The modern meaning, however, focuses on <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>breaking<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> with tradition. According to Eisenstein, it was print that started to change this meaning of original, as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">notions of recovery and discovery were reoriented after the coming of print technology <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0192)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/mybrilliantcareer.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2650 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/mybrilliantcareer.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"210\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/mybrilliantcareer.jpg 680w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/mybrilliantcareer-300x211.jpg 300w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/mybrilliantcareer-427x300.jpg 427w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Printer-publishers also started to construct the author as a marketing product. This meant that new publicity techniques were explored, by printers as well as by authors, including marketing forms such as blurbs to publicly promote authors and sell their works <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0229)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. Yet again, Eisenstein emphasises that this kind of marketing could only take place successfully and establish <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>new<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> forms of authorship after the coming of print. Scribal culture, she points out, \u2018could not sustain the patenting of inventions or the copyrighting of literary compositions. It worked against the concept of intellectual property rights\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Eisenstein 1979:\u00a0186)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> Adrian Johns takes another approach with respect to the development of authorship, focusing mainly on the establishment of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>credentiality<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> as part of the rise of authorship. How did readers ensure a work was authorative? It is important to keep in mind that compositors, just like modern editors, played an important authorial role, he argues. A copy of a manuscript could never be exactly reproduced in print, due to space constraints, for instance. Copies were thus amended during the printing process. For example, typography was used to enhance authorial meaning and changes were made in anticipation of a certain readership. Johns further remarks that original used to refer to a particular performance or reading of a work. This meant that written records were seen as a simple fallible transcription of a particular event. As Johns states, \u2018compositors could thus make the changes their cultural position demanded, not only because <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the prized virtue <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the master printer, but also because they held in their hands no sacrosanct text at risk <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">desecration\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0105)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. According to Johns, copyright meant that a Stationer had a right to both the manuscript as well as the text. The Stationer thus protected his investment by turning this (fallible) transcription into a fully edited printed book <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0105)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. In this way Stationers and booksellers controlled every aspects of their books\u2019 production. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> The establishment of authorship as we know it today was very difficult in these conditions. Hence both Johns and Chartier argue that we should speak of forms of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>distributed authorship<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> at that time, where authorship was allocated to a number of individuals and groups. <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Chartier points to Foucault\u2019s focus on the penal background of authorship in this respect, when he states that ownership of a text has always been related to its penal appropriation. Books really became to have authors, instead of mythical figures, when authors became subject to punishment, and they could be held responsible for the diffusion of texts that were seen as scandalous or as guilty of heterodoxy. Chartier focuses on how this responsibility was initially a <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>distributed<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> responsibility. As he puts it:<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">In the repression <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">suspect books, however, the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">re<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">sponsibility <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the author <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">a censured book does not seem to have been considered any greater than that <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">printer who published it, the bookseller or the pedlar who sold it, or the reader who possessed it. All could be led to the stake <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">if <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">they were convicted <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">having proffered or diffused heretical opinions. <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">What <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">is <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">more, the acts <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">conviction often mix accusations concerning the printing and sale <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">censured books and accusations concerning the opinions\u2014published or un<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">published\u2014of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the perpetrator <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Chartier 1994:\u00a050)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2662 aligncenter\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing.jpg 400w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing-300x225.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">As part of the proprietry culture of that time and based on their right to copy, Stationers for a long time held the position of authors, specifically with respect to establishing credentiality <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0138)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. In forms of collaborative book production, however, establishing credentiality was harder, as no one publisher was responsible for the entire book. Nonetheless, the stationer was, for all means and purposes, the proprietary author of the book, the one who was responsible for the content. Febvre and Martin explain that authors had no right to their work once it was bought and published, as then the copy was vested in the publisher <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Febvre and Martin 1997:\u00a0162.)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. As Johns makes clear: \u2018certainly, this was designed to give the state someone to prosecute: its aim was to create a person in whom responsibility for the contents <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the work could be said to reside. But it was also hoped that the device would eliminate unauthorized <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">printing\u2014the <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">practice increasingly called &#8220;piracy&#8221;\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0159\u2013160)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> What kind of options did authors have in this situation? How could they control their authorship, when the publishers\u2019 market-based conventions were so dominant? Did publishers control printed knowledge in this respect? As Johns states: \u2018authorial civility was inextricably entangled with Stationers&#8217; civility. For the modern figure <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the individualized author to be constructed, this had to change\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0246)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. What is clear, Johns argues, is that the situation changed once authorship and copyright were embedded in law. With this the notion of authorship started to change too, where the Lockean idea of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>invention<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> as the mark of property started to gain wider ground <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0247)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> In opposition to Eisenstein, among others, Johns thus emphasises that authorship and authority are a matter of cultural practices and negotiation; they are conventions that could and can be challenged. We should see them as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>attributions to<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> a book (by various groups and individuals such as publishers, readers etc.) instead of intrinsic <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>attributes of<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> a book <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0271)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. As Johns argues, then, in the battle surrounding how and to whom a book should be attributed credit or ownership, the author emerged. For scholars, forms of appropriation were a natural part of publishing their book. To protect their reputation they needed to negotiate potential hazards such as piracy, translations, abridgements, commercial sustainability etc., all matters that could deeply harm a scholar <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0445)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. The priority disputes in experimental philosophy\u2014linked to publishing\u2014got increasingly complicated and urgent, Johns points out, where both the existence of a record as well as the identity of its contents mattered. A new proprietary culture was therefore set up around authorship to deal with these problems, through which the profession of the author emerged <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Febvre and Martin 1997:\u00a066)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. Johns explains that fixity and authorship were thus established together, as the establishment of a problem:<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"western\" style=\"text-align:justify;\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">And <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the recognition <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">authorship blossomed, so, in a mutually reinforcing process, arguments demonstrating a resolved identity for printing began to win the upper hand, and the credit <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">its products became more widespread. By the end <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">of <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">the nineteenth century, print and fixity were <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">firmly conjoined by culture <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">as <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">ever could have been achieved by machinery <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Johns 1998:\u00a0632)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/view.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-2651 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/view.png?w=244\" alt=\"\" width=\"244\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/view.png 694w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/view-245x300.png 245w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 244px) 100vw, 244px\" \/><\/a><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Chartier warns however against pinpointing specific and unique historical moments of construction or determining causes for the rise of authorship and the author function. It is no good to focus on univocal solutions or oversimplified causes, he states. Book history can offer some insights in this problem, in all its variety, sketching out a possible path or focus point\u2014such as the juridical, repressive and material mechanisms Chartier focuses on\u2014however, it does not offer an answer to what authorship was, is, and will be <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Chartier 1994:\u00a059)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">What these discourses show is that authorship is integrally linked to developments in the commercial book trade, growing scholarly claims for priority and credit, and the expansion of ideas related to ownership, copyright and originality. As Mark Rose has argued, \u2018the distinguishing characteristic of the modern author, I propose, is proprietorship; the author is conceived as the originator and therefore the owner of a special kind of commodity, the work\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Rose 1993:\u00a01)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. Although the debate on how authorship came about again focuses mainly on the medium vs. society binary, a further conclusion that can be reached is that authorship came to be entangled with the humanist characteristics now commonly attributed to the book. Fixed, essentialised, and bound as a book, romantic notions of authorship came to stand for a highly individualistic, authorative and original writer, who was to be connected to a permanent body of works. The commercial and capitalist nature of the book trade with its focus on propriety and ownership instilled the idea of copyright and property into the relationship between an author and her or his text.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Although these humanist notions of authorship\u2014including the connotations of reputation, individual creativity, ownership, authority, attribution, responsibility and originality they carry\u2014seem to be an integral part of the scholarly method, even despite fact that they are often critiqued, they are very hard to overcome. Nonetheless, it is important to continue to challenge these traditional concepts, discourses, institutions and practices of authorship within academia. First of all because these essentialised notions of authorship do not do credit to the more collaborative and networked authorial practices as they exist currently and as they have existed in the past, in academia and beyond. As Adrian Johns emphasises, agency is more complex and distributed than the highly individualist narratives accompanying romantic notions of authorship argue for. In this respect there is a ongoing clash between what Robert Merton has identified as the values of originality and communism in scholarship (Merton 1973). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> Another reason to challenge humanist concepts of authorship relates to the function currently fulfilled by authors in the academic political economy. In an effort to gain reputation and authority in a scholarly attention economy, academic authors are increasingly depicted as being in constant competition with each other (for positions, impact, funding etc.), where scholars are still rewarded mostly on the basis of their publication track record, and on their reputation as individual authors. Academic authors are on the one hand turned into commodities, while on the other they increasingly need to act as entrepreneurs and marketeers of their own \u2018brand\u2019. This objectification of authorship at a time when \u2018unoriginal\u2019 thought, depicted as plagiarism, is heavily combatted and frowned upon, goes against some of the more distributive and collaborative notions, practices and discourses of authorship described above. Yet the latter can be seen to not only be just as prevalent in contemporary academia, but in many ways a more realistic depiction of scholarly authorial practices. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2652 aligncenter\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"216\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455.jpg 1955w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455-300x217.jpg 300w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455-1024x741.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455-768x555.jpg 768w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455-1536x1111.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/455-415x300.jpg 415w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Finally, the strength of the humanist discourse on authorship in academia can be seen to inhibit experimentation with different models and functions of authorship and forms of what can be called posthumanist authorship,<\/span><a class=\"sdfootnoteanc\" href=\"#sdfootnote1sym\" name=\"sdfootnote1anc\"><sup>1<\/sup><\/a><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> and the possible potential of digital media to help rethink what authorship is and can be. This does not mean, as we will see in what follows, that digital forms of authorship are always a critique of the humanist notions underlying more traditional and print-based forms of writing; but I want to emphasise that, no matter how problematic they still might be, digital media do contain the <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>potential <\/i><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">to helps us rethink and re-perform authorship and to envision more ethical and inclusive forms of authorship within academia.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> In order to analyse some of the main theoretical and practical criticisms that have been brought forward with respect to romantic and humanist notions of authorship, the next section will explore some of the authorship critique expressed by poststructuralist thinkers in the 1960s and 70s. This will be followed by an analysis of three more recent assessments of authorship, which can all in their different ways be seen as a practical extension of the poststructuralists\u2019 critique. As I will argue, these practical or embodied expositions target different aspects of the discourse of the humanist author, namely the author\u2019s authority, individuality and originality. First of all I will analyse the position taken by theorists and practitioners of hypertext with respect to networked authorship, challenging the <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>authority<\/i><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> of the author by focusing on the power of the reader and on the author as a node in a distributed network of meaning production and consumption. Secondly I will look at some of the authorial practices that have been developed in the sciences and increasingly in the digital humanities, such as the spread of hyperauthorship and collaborative research work. These are challenging the <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>individualistic<\/i><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> nature of authorship and promoting increasingly open-ended research practices and alternative (digital) views concerning creativity and invention. Finally, I will take a look at academic practices of remix, which are mainly critiquing the <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><i>originality<\/i><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"> of authorship, where the trope of the remixer or curator seems to be increasingly prevailing in current scholarship on digital authorship, for instance (and the narrative of the former seems to be replacing the latter). <\/span><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"western\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span lang=\"en-GB\">Critiquing authorship in theory<\/span><\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Kathleen Fitzpatrick writes in her article \u2018<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">The Digital Future of Authorship: Rethinking Originality&#8217;, <\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">about her personal struggle with traditional notions of authorship, a struggle not uncommon to other academic authors. As remarked upon at the beginning of this thesis, Fitzpatrick states that although we try to criticise the way authorship functions in academia and society at large<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">, \u2018<\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">our own authorship practices have remained subsumed within those institutional and ideological frameworks\u2019 <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Fitzpatrick 2011c:\u00a03)<\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. Connected as it is with our scholarly and publishing practices, one of the biggest challenges with respect to changing our notions of authorship will be, as Fitzpatrick argues, that \u2018<\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">changing one aspect of the way we work of necessity implies change across the entirety of the way we work\u2019 <\/span><\/span><span style=\"color:#000000;\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Fitzpatrick 2011c:\u00a04)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. As Derrida has pointed out in this respect, we \u2018cannot temper with it [the form of the book] without disturbing everything else\u2019 <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">(Derrida 1983:\u00a03)<\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">. For instance, if we want to move towards an authorship function that puts more emphasis on openness, sharing, experimentation and collaboration, this means that we need to reconsider where scholarly authority, originality and responsibility lie in a digital environment, and whether or not we really need them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">The by now classic insights of Barthes and Foucault on authorship remain valuable in this respect. Both analysed and critiqued romantic and humanist forms of authorship by examining the specific subject position and agency of the author, and the relationship of authorship to text, writing and the work. In his essay \u2018The Death of the Author\u2019 (1967) Barthes describes how authorship kills the text by stabilising it. It is authorship in this sense that tries to affix a definite meaning, and which has been used over the centuries as a strategy to read meaning into texts, Barthes argues. And this reaches its culmination in capitalist society where work and author are united in a commercial product. In his anti-intentionalist critique of authorship, Barthes however states that we cannot affix a stable meaning to a text via the authorship function, as it does not control it. He focuses instead on the multiplicity of meanings (heteroglossia) and threads that are available in language, in the relationships between texts (intertextuality), and in the act of writing, and which are extracted through the person of the reader. In Barthes\u2019 vision then, text, and its multiple meanings, comes into existence in the act of reading, not when the author is creating it. In this respect Barthes\u2019 critique has initiated a move away from the integral connection between an author and her or his work, focusing more on the performative character of text and language and the meaning attribution by readers instead (Barthes 1967). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a href=\"https:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/cafe.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2653 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/openreflections.wordpress.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/cafe.jpg?w=211\" alt=\"\" width=\"211\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/cafe.jpg 226w, https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/cafe-212x300.jpg 212w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 211px) 100vw, 211px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"western\" align=\"JUSTIFY\"><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">Foucault has drawn further on Barthes\u2019 critique <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">in his seminal paper <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">&#8216;What is an author?\u2019 (1969). He writes that the notion of the author is directly related to a moment of individualisation in history, connected to ideas of attribution and authenticity. A move away from authorship such as that proposed by Barthes, won\u2019t be enough, Foucault claims, as this has to imply a similar move away from the idea of the single, stable and often bounded work that is still integrally connected to our notion of the author, even if we move away from authorial meaning attribution. In this respect Foucault argues that a critique of authorship necessarily implies a critique of the work and, in this specific context, of the scholarly book. Where does a work end when it becomes no more than a trace of writing, disconnected from a specific author? Both the notion of the work and of the author are thus problematic, and replacing the latter\u2019s authority with the former will not be very helpful, according to Foucault. <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">He points out that we need to analyse the functions authorship fulfils in a society, such as the way it operates within a certain discursive setting to bind together a group of texts and establishes a relationship amongst them. We need to critically reassess these functions as being the representation of certain discourses within a society, discourses focusing on ownership of research (appropriation) and related to (penal) responsibility. Authorship is thus a function of discourse in Foucault\u2019s vision. In its connection with authorship, discourses themselves were even turned from acts into things, goods, and property. And as Foucault states, criticising Barthes in this respect, authorship is only one of the discursive practices we need to analyse. We need to explore how authorship and knowledge get to be produced in our knowledge economies and whether we need to reassess or change these discourses. In what ways do we construct an author and how do we determine the origin of a work? How can we rethink knowledge products, authority, truth claims, and originality? In what sense is an author function introduced to regulate meaning? <\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\">By questioning the author, Foucault argues that we are not simply freeing the text, we are interrogating the work at the same time, the latter being the extension of certain discursive practices within a society (Foucault 1977).<\/span><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<div id=\"sdfootnote1\">\n<p align=\"JUSTIFY\"><a class=\"sdfootnotesym\" href=\"#sdfootnote1anc\" name=\"sdfootnote1sym\">1<\/a><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\"> A questioning of authorship\u2019s humanist legacy does not necessarily need to be a distancing of humanism. Authorship\u2019s humanist history already provides the seed for a radical self-critique, where an inherent <\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\"><i>post-<\/i><\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\">humanist authorship has, as can be argued, always already been a part of its proclaimed &#8216;otherness&#8217;. The question is then how we can aid in a practical posthumanist critique of authorship\u2019s humanist notions, if we see posthumanism as &#8216;humanism&#8217;s ongoing deconstruction&#8217; <\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\">(Badmington 2000:\u00a09\u201310, Herbrechter 2013)<\/span><\/span><span style=\"font-family:Calibri, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size:small;\">.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<h3 align=\"JUSTIFY\">Bibliography<\/h3>\n<p><span lang=\"en-US\">Adema, J. 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(2009) \u2018Sharing Tales of the Dutch Revolt in a Virtual Research Environment\u2019. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><i>Logos<\/i><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> 20 (1-4), 1\u201313<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span lang=\"en-US\">Warwick, C. (2004) \u2018Print Scholarship and Digital Resources\u2019. in <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><i>Companion to Digital Humanities<\/i><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> [online] Hardcover. ed. by Schreibman, S., Siemens, R., and Unsworth, J. Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Professional. available from &lt;http:\/\/www.digitalhumanities.org\/companion\/&gt;<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span lang=\"en-US\">Weber, S. (2000) \u2018The Future of the Humanities: Experimenting\u2019. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><i>Culture Machine<\/i><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> [online] 2 (0). available from &lt;http:\/\/www.culturemachine.net\/index.php\/cm\/article\/view\/311&gt; [4 December 2013]<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chapter 3 of my thesis focuses on authorship, and you can find a draft of the first part of the chapter underneath. As I stated before, any feedback is of course more than welcome but please take into account that these are just fragments in process which are part of a larger (undefined) \u2018whole\u2019. For [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2656,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,6,9],"tags":[107,115,157,158,171,285,316,476,511,566,600,608,624,638,738,782,794,901,1169,1310,1313,1371,1404,1482,1502,1784,1876],"class_list":["post-2648","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-copyright","category-ebooks","category-information-and-knowledge","tag-anonymous-authorship","tag-anti-authorship-critique","tag-author-function","tag-authority","tag-barthes","tag-chartier","tag-collaboration","tag-digital-humanities","tag-distributed-authorship","tag-eisenstein","tag-experimentation","tag-febvre-and-martin","tag-fitzpatrick","tag-foucault","tag-hall","tag-humanism","tag-hypertext","tag-johns","tag-monographs","tag-openness","tag-originality","tag-plagiarism","tag-posthumanist-authorship","tag-remix","tag-responsibility","tag-trust","tag-wikis"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/08\/woman-writing-cornell-univ-library-1920-640.jpg","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2648","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=2648"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2648\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/2656"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=2648"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=2648"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/openreflections.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=2648"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}